Wednesday, October 30, 2019

SPECIAL FEATURE TODAY: A Video-On-Demand (VOD) Dump > More Doo-Doo From City of Mesa

Whew! We are so blessed! to get one moreof these short-feature segments from a city-owned and taxpayer-funded media outlet -
it's almost as good as the City of Mesa Newsroom for producing content we really have a NEED-TO-KNOW for issues that impact everyone who lives here.
Nothing ever about the crisis in affordable housing.
Nothing ever about the lack of public engagement in the government that somehow manages to get elected to serve "special interests" . . . 
QUESTION: Is this the kind of programming you want ??

Mesa Skybridge Is Just "Breaking Ground" Now...After All That Hype

Take a look - looks like NOTHING THERE. Right?
But there are 'all the dignitaries' and it looks like all the dirt is shovel-ready for Mesa's inland e-commerce customs port.
They all could be hitting pay-dirt with just the start of the first two buildings on a 360-acre tract of open barren land that they really need-to-sell.
Just one big problem: that modernized NAFTA trade agreement USMCA has yet to get approved by passing through Congress and signed-off on President Trump.
Reaching through Canada and Mexico
[Giles says 200 airports in Mexico]
__________________________________________________________________________
SkyBridge, construction, airport and city representatives breaking ground on SkyBridge's new development at the Gateway Airport.
From left to right are:
  • Jose Pablo Martinez from SkyBridge
  • Pete Wentis from CBRE
  • Felipe Monroy from SkyBridge
  • Ariel Picker from SkyPlus
  • John Giles from Mesa
  • Kevin Thompson from Mesa
  • Jeff Flemming from ADM Group
  • Rusty Martin from Graycor Construction
  • J. Brian O'Neill from Gateway Airport
(Photo: Alison Steinbach/The Republic)
_________________________________________________________________________________
Huge SkyBridge project with customs facility at Mesa's Gateway airport gets underway
"The nation's first inland air cargo hub to house a joint U.S.-Mexican customs facility broke ground Monday at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport.
The customs facility is planned as part of a larger, 23-building development in and around the airport near Ellsworth and Ray roads in Mesa.
The development, called SkyBridge, is projected to bring 17,000 long-term jobs to the area, directly and indirectly, according to development officials. 
Skybridge plans call for four million square feet of building space sprawled across 360 acres at the airport and 88 acres just outside the gates. The construction now getting underway is on the first two buildings.
"I think we're all pinching ourselves — we've been really looking forward to this day,"
Mesa Mayor John Giles said at the ceremonial groundbreaking . . "
_________________________________________________________________________
How about a 1-minute video?
Covering Mesa: Skybridge breaks ground
Published on Oct 28, 2019:
Views: 50+
 
Convenient link to a press release from City of Mesa Newsroom > http://mesanow.org/news/public/articl

Direct link to view upload on YouTube > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXuAbk0rbG8 
 

Rising Global Risks > Demonizing China Instead of Facing The New Reality

From Axios / by Dave Lawler 6 hours ago
A world of rising risks and little leadership
"The era of American dominance is "definitively over," war with China is growing more likely, and world leaders are risking long-term security by refusing to face challenges like climate change, according to a new Atlantic Council report titled "Global Risks 2035." 
[ Illustration: Rebecca Zisser/Axios ]
The big picture: Author Mathew Burrows, a CIA veteran who previously steered long-term risk forecasts for the U.S. intelligence community, writes that the world is slipping into a "new bipolarity" defined by competition between the U.S. and China. . .
The U.S. has so far been unwilling to adapt to the changing global reality, Burrows tells Axios. No other country would imagine it could "only ensure national security through primacy," he says. . .
The big picture: Most of the worst-case scenarios Burrows envisions are based not on an unexpected event, but on failure to act on entirely foreseeable challenges like struggling middle classes in the West, growing mountains of debt and climate change.
  • "These things are fixable," he says, but they require leadership and a sense of purpose that eclipses the partisan divide. Burrows doesn't sound particularly optimistic.
The bottom line: "Is there any way to stop the descent?" Burrows writes in the report. "No leader believes he or she has the means to stop it. At home in all the major powers, growing populism, nativism, and jingoism come to the fore, militating against saving the world."
Go deeper: Read the report.

Opinion, Politics & Ideas: Watch Out Arizona Republicans! The Democrats Most Comfortable Path To Victory Runs Through Mesa . . .

That's right! ...looks like there's definitely a rising tide here in Mesa that could sweep-out the generations-old GOP entrenched establishment that's ruled for far too long.
Hard-to-believe for sure.
What's next when this news strikes a incongruent chord in the usual perception of Mesa as a majority-red city - one of the fastest growing in the country?
And a big change decades in coming that's changing the demographics in voter registrations creates both a rising tide in other-than-Republican circles with asurprise surge inside the most conservative city in Arizona!!
Arizona Could Decide the 2020 Election
The Democrats’ most comfortable path to victory runs through Mesa, not Milwaukee.
By William A. Galston
The Wall Street Journal
"Assume, as I do, that President Trump survives a Senate trial and is renominated as the Republican candidate for president. With one year to go until the election, here are a few things we can say about the emerging contest.
First, Mr. Trump is unlikely to win any state he did not carry in 2016. As of Tuesday, according to Civiqs polling, 43% of Americans approve of his performance as president and 54% disapprove—a net rating of minus-11. But in each of the seven states where Mr. Trump fell short by 10 points or less in 2016,...  "

Riots in Iraq serving as legacy of US failure

15 years after U.S. invaded Iraq to establish a beacon of democracy, the government wants to kick out American forces

Sun, Cold Records, Deep Signals Before MegaQuakes | S0 News Oct.30.2019

   B4 MEGA-Quakes
Major existential concerns about Dark Matter > Rumbles and Deep Signals

Repo: How Roughly $1 Trillion Moves Overnight | WSJ

A Technical Malfunction??
The rates spiked on Sept 16 and Sept 17 . . . then 'a crash' and a shock
Published on Oct 29, 2019
Views: 57,250++
The repo market shook the financial world in September when an unexpected rate spike choked short-term lending, spurring the Federal Reserve to intervene. WSJ explains how this critical, but murky part of the financial system works, and why some banks say the crunch could have been prevented.
Illustration: Jacob Reynolds for The Wall Street Journal

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